...while other districts get theirs.
Here's a NY Times article about Damian Williams, the first Black U.S. Attorney for the SDNY.
One night in
December 2018, two dozen lawyers and judges gathered at a fashionable
restaurant in New York’s TriBeCa neighborhood to welcome a new member,
Damian Williams, into their distinguished fold.
Each
had once been a federal prosecutor in Manhattan, running a special unit
in the U. S. attorney’s office that investigated fraud on Wall Street.
It was a job barely known to the public. But among New York’s corporate
and legal elite, it was a position of power and influence, often shared
by co-chiefs.
Mr. Williams was the
latest appointee. That night, amid jocular toasts and ribbing, Judge Jed
S. Rakoff read a whimsical poem in honor of Mr. Williams, gently
mocking his self-effacing nature with an out-of-character boast:
“I’m now co-chief — my name is Damian,” the judge began. “Things will never be the same again.”
The judge was only teasing, but in one sense he got it right.
On
Tuesday, Mr. Williams, 41, was confirmed by the Senate to be the next
United States attorney for the Southern District of New York — a
position whose occupants have included future judges, senators, cabinet
members and a New York City mayor. The appointment would make Mr.
Williams the most powerful federal law enforcement official in Manhattan
and, significantly, the first Black person to lead the storied 232-year-old office.
***
“Beyond his extraordinary qualifications,
Damian is the right person at this time in history to be the U.S.
attorney for Manhattan,” said Theodore V. Wells Jr., a Black partner at
the law firm Paul, Weiss and one of the nation’s most prominent
litigators.
“It’s important for both
Blacks and whites to see a person of African-American descent —
especially in this time where there’s so much social unrest — in that
top job,” Mr. Wells said.
David E.
Patton, the city’s federal public defender, said Mr. Williams now has
the opportunity to institute key reforms in the way his prosecutors
charge cases, like embracing President Biden’s campaign pledge to end
mandatory minimum sentences.
“This is a core issue he can tackle,” Mr. Patton said.
Another
issue Mr. Williams will confront is diversity in his office: Of its 232
assistant U.S. attorneys and executives, only seven — including himself
— are African American.